SOUNDTRACK: GARBAGE-Not Your Kind of People (2012).
After Bleed, I had basically given up on Garbage. And they had given up as well, so it made the breakup easier. For seven years they stayed away, but in 2012 the band reunited and released Not Your Kind of People. I wasn’t planning to get it–two great albums and two very mediocre albums l leave a listener with a tough decision But I heard good things–a return to form, less dance more rock and I gave in.
And it was a good choice. The slickness is still there, which makes sense given who we are dealing with, but it feels more powerful than recent albums and, even better, Manson seems angrier which always makes her vocals better.
“Big Bright World” could have been a hit (for a new band) although it’s a little generic. “Blood for Poppies” returns to that good grungy guitar sound and yet with its “Wo Ho Ohs” it also has pop song trappings. “Control” is big and loud with some interesting sounds thrown on top. It’s probably the closest to 2.0 Even the chorus is very old school Garbage, something they seemed to shy away from on the last two albums.
“Not Your Kind of People is a slow ballady type song but it stands above their recent ballads–the song is cleaner and darker, much more interesting. And given how sweet the backing vocals of the chorus sound, I’m surprised I like it as much I do. “Felt” has a real “Stupid Girl” feel to it, except for the poppy bridge. I don’t like the end where she repeats the Oh oh oh oh oh oh oh bit, but that’s just something I dislike about pop music in general. “I Hate Love” brings in all of the glitches and electronics that the band uses so effectively, and despite the retro-90s feel of that, it really adds to the music. “Sugar” is a beautiful slow song. The kind that, when they do it well, sounds great.
“Battle in Me” is almost a great song. The guitar builds and then stops short–it worked so well on “Supervixen” but sounds just too sterile here–the technology too crisp or something But “Man on a Wire” does everything right–the guitars, Shirley’s screaming/singing, the rough guitars–it’s a shame this is buried so far down on the album. “Beloved Freak” is a nice closer although as I complained from “Special” quoting someone else’s song in your song is cool once, but dong it again sounds lazy. So here we get her ending the song with a line from “This Little light of Mine” which doesn’t work and rather than making you smile like it did on Special it makes you go, “Huh?” Plus as anyone who ever wrote a paper knows, never end with someone else’s words!
Still, this is a nice return to creative excitement from the band. And while it never reaches the majesty of their first two albums it comes close to some of their past glories.
[READ: February 1, 2013] The ElseWhere Chronicles Book Four and Five
After a hiatus, Bannister & Nykko return with what feels like a new version of The Elsewhere Chronicles. The look of the art is slightly different. It’s clearly the same artist but the lines and angles look a little different on the characters–just a wee bit harsher. It’s odd. But it shows that things are a little different now.
The setting is nine moths after the end of book three. Max has not spoken to any of the others since the lat book when his mother slapped him. Indeed, he’s been hanging around with his brother and his brother’s friends who are no good (especially to Max). But Theo and Noah had rescued a bunch of things from Grandpa Gabe’s house. They stored them safely somewhere before the house was demolished. Meanwhile, Rebecca has been ill and hasn’t seen any of them. She believes that the illness was caused in the other world and knows she needs to return there to get better.
Max is having a hard time with his new gang They don’t respect him at all and he actually hates hanging around with them all. In fact they just kicked him out of their gang and he is sulking when he believes he sees Rebecca. Could she really have returned? He follows her as she goes to her grandpa’s house. She starts to break down when she sees that it was demolished. She’s about to despair when and old friend sees her and gives her comfort.
Noah and Theo show her that they have Gabe’s possessions. And they show her that the have figured out how to use the machine. So they reactivate the passageway and the three of them return to the other world. Before we can really see what happens over there, Max heads off to the hiding place. He also passes through the passageway where he runs into Gabe who (after threatening to kill Max) offers to drive him to where Rebecca and the boys must be.
They arrive just as Rebecca and friends sneak into a cave. Gabe says that the cave leads to nothing but danger. And as the book ends, we see that that is true….
Book Five has a pretty scary cover (showing that this series is definitely for older kids, although my five-year old (who can’t actually read) has been enjoying the stories quite a bit–even this scary one which is about “vampires”). Although it is not about vampires. As the story starts, we pick up with Max and Grandpa Gabe exploring a cave where Rebecca, Noah and Theo have gone. First they encounter a “zombie” bear (for lack of a better way to describe what happened to them–they seem like really nasty zombies). Max and Gabe work together to defeat the bear, but then they learn that their friends have also been zombified.
Gabe knows how to deal with them in this situation and after some bizarre pages that are a little hard to follow, we realize that all is well again for the kids. And when they finally wake from their situation, Rebecca is at last reunited (for the first time) with her Grandpa Gabe. But things are not good for long.
A herd of sand whales moves through the territory (a wonderful visual) and Noah is trapped by them–not to be seen again for this book. This obviously impacts the morale of everyone, with Max saying he will never leave until Theo is avenged and Noah, the person who most wanted to leave, also feeling that he can’t leave with things like this.
There are a few funny moments as the troupe fights through a giant dandelion forest, but there’s very little hope left. And when the last two pages come along–full of more misery, it’s hard to process exactly what’s happening–but it’s obviously not good. An alternate Rebecca? Who is the wizard threatening to harm the innocent dragon? This ending seems to add a whole host of potential story lines–it feels like the scale of the piece has grown epically. Which is why it’s upsetting that Book 6 is not out yet and doesn’t appear to be coming out until much later this year.
But now I’m hooked.

Leave a comment